As in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's magic-realist novel One Hundred Years of Solitude, Niebla's precise setting is uncertain—somewhere in rural Latin America—and the story's narrator is El Pep, an old man being interviewed in his living room by a documentary film crew about the mysterious fog of the title and the resulting visitation by a strange flock of flying sheep. "The character is strongly based on my grandmother," Ramos says. "She was a very complex person, with many frustrations in life. She was born during the Mexican Revolution, so she experienced a lack of material possessions throughout her life. But she was also very kind and loving with her family (well..., most of the time). She was a combination of marked strenghs and weaknesses. At the end of her life, she suffered from dementia. 'My mind is leaving me,' she used to say, distressed, when she noticed. The only moments we could communicate with her were when we asked her about her past life. Those memories were the last to vanish." Review by Taylor Jessen, Animation World Network.